Subscriber access provided by UB + Fachbibliothek Chemie | (FU-Bibliothekssystem)
Article
Bacterial diversity in ships’ ballast water, ballast-water exchange, and implications for ship-mediated dispersal of microorganisms Despoina S. Lymperopoulou, and Fred C. Dobbs Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b03108 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Jan 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 3, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Bacterial diversity in ships’ ballast water, ballast-water exchange, and implications for
2
ship-mediated dispersal of microorganisms
3
Despoina S. Lymperopoulou† and Fred C. Dobbs‡,*
4 5 6
†Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California – Berkeley, 331 Koshland Hall, Berkeley, California 94720 USA
7
8 9
‡Department of Ocean, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Old Dominion University, 4600 Elkhorn Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia 23529 USA
10 11 12
Corresponding author
13
*Phone: (757) 683-5329; Fax: (757) 683-5303; Email:
[email protected] 1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
14
Abstract
15
Using next-generation DNA sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, we analyzed the composition
16
and diversity of bacterial assemblages in ballast water from tanks of 17 commercial ships
17
arriving to Hampton Roads, Virginia (USA) following voyages in the North Atlantic Ocean.
18
Amplicon sequencing analysis showed the heterogeneous assemblages were: 1) dominated by
19
Alpha- and Gammaproteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and unclassified Bacteria; 2) temporally
20
distinct (June vs. August/September); 3) highly fidelitous among replicate samples. Whether
21
tanks were exchanged at sea or not, their bacterial assemblages differed from those of local,
22
coastal water. Compositional data suggested at-sea exchange did not fully flush coastal Bacteria
23
from all tanks; there were several instances of a genetic geographic signal. Quantitative PCR
24
yielded no Escherichia coli and few instances of Vibrio species. Salinity, but not ballast-water
25
age or temperature, contributed significantly to bacterial diversity. Whether anthropogenic
26
mixing of marine Bacteria re-structures their biogeography remains to be tested.
Page 2 of 41
27 28
Keywords: ballast water, Bacteria, Illumina sequencing, 16S rRNA, ballast-water exchange
29
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 3 of 41
30
Environmental Science & Technology
Introduction
31
Ballasting operations associated with commercial shipping translocate enormous volumes of
32
water daily, nearly all of which, except an un-pumpable residual, eventually is discharged, often
33
in coastal areas and navigable inland waters. In the United States alone, more than 100 million
34
metric tonnes of overseas ballast water is discharged annually.1 Entrained in those discharges are
35
organisms taken up when ballasting and which survived days to months in the tanks. In this way,
36
ballasting operations have introduced nonindigenous organisms globally, and some have
37
subsequently flourished in novel environments and are implicated in deleterious economic,
38
environmental, and public-health issues.2, 3 The case for such invasions is much better articulated
39
for invertebrates and harmful algae than for Bacteria,4 but there is strong evidence that ballast-
40
water discharges introduce fecal-indicator bacteria5-7 and bacterial pathogens.8-14
41
While pathogens certainly are a concern with respect to human and ecosystem health, their
42
abundance in ballast water, as in natural aquatic environments, is very low compared to
43
environmental Bacteria. Indeed, in the absence of treatment to kill or remove microorganisms,
44
overseas ballast water discharged in the United States delivers 107 to 109 bacteria cells/L,15-19
45
yielding on order of 1019 cells per year; approximately the same total was estimated for ballast
46
discharges in Canada.18 Prior to application of next-generation sequencing approaches, scientific
47
focus on these astronomical numbers of cells was principally, but not exclusively,5, 20 to
48
enumerate them using epifluorescence microscopy, a tool incapable of assessing their
49
community composition and diversity. Such enumerative studies included samples from ends of
50
ships’ voyages,15, 16, 18, 21 while others examined the temporal dynamics of bacterial numbers
51
during voyages.17, 19, 22-24
3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
52
Page 4 of 41
Given concerns about conveyance and release of nonindigenous or pathogenic
53
microorganisms and larger organisms in the course of ballasting operations, some countries
54
regulate the maximum concentrations of organisms allowed in discharged ballast water.25 Global
55
standards were proposed in the International Maritime Organization’s “Convention for the
56
Control and Management of Ships’ Ballast Water and Sediments” (http://www.imo.org), which
57
will enter into force in 2017. Although there is a considerable industry in developing technology-
58
based treatments to reduce the concentration of discharged organisms,26 the interim practice is to
59
flush coastal water from ballast tanks and replace it with open-ocean water, so called ballast-
60
water exchange (BWE). The thought is first, to discharge coastal organisms and second, to
61
ensure ballast water released subsequently contains open-ocean organisms unable to survive and
62
reproduce in a coastal or freshwater environment.27
63
Little is known about the composition and diversity of Bacteria in ballast water, in contrast to
64
our understanding of its taxonomic diversity of metazoan species,28-30 eukaryotic
65
phytoplankton,17, 31, 32 and other protists.6, 33 The modern standard for assessing microbial
66
diversity is high throughput sequencing, an approach based in molecular biology and one that
67
does not involve cultivation, but instead employs DNA sequencing to provide a much more
68
comprehensive view of microbial assemblages. Following a call3 for this technique to be applied
69
to microorganisms in ballast water, such studies recently began to appear.14, 34-40 In the present
70
study, we used next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the 16S rRNA gene to characterize Bacteria
71
in ballast water collected from 17 commercial vessels arriving to Hampton Roads, Virginia,
72
USA, following voyages in the North Atlantic Ocean. Based on genetic signatures, we describe
73
assemblages of Bacteria from ballast tanks and compare them, whether exchanged at sea or not,
74
with one another, with bacterial communities of local waters, and with previous studies. We
4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 5 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
75
hypothesized we would detect compositional differences with respect to ships’ previous ports of
76
call, whether the ships had exchanged at sea, and the length of time water had been held. We
77
conclude by considering the implications of this research on the distribution of aquatic
78
microorganisms.
79 80
Materials and Methods
81
Ethics statement: Ballast-water samples were collected by colleagues from the Smithsonian
82
Environmental Research Center (SERC), which routinely samples vessels as part of a joint
83
program with the US Coast Guard. Terms of agreement with ships’ owners and companies
84
operating vessels prohibit our publishing names of vessels. Code names were assigned to vessels
85
by SERC scientists.
86
Sample collection and processing: The port system at Hampton Roads, Virginia, includes ports
87
in Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Newport News on the Elizabeth and James Rivers, tributaries close
88
by the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, largest estuary in the United States. Coal exports and
89
containers are the principal traffic, with nearly 79 million short tons in 2013, placing Hampton
90
Roads as the 6th largest port in the US, and 5th largest with respect to total foreign trade
91
(http://www.aapa-ports.org/). From 2011 to 2103, the National Ballast Information
92
Clearinghouse ranked the port third in the United States with respect to discharge of overseas
93
ballast water (40.3 million m3, http://invasions.si.edu/nbic/search.html).
94
Ballast water was sampled from 17 vessels, 10 in June 2013 and 7 in August/September 2013
95
(Table 1). Twelve ships had their last port of call in Europe and had conducted BWE in tanks
96
from which samples were collected (Table 1). The last ports of call of the remaining 5 ships were
5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 6 of 41
97
in North America; two of these (CB21 and CB25) had exchanged ballast water at sea. Of those
98
tanks that underwent BWE, exchange volumes were ≥ 300% in most cases, except for CB24,
99
CB37, CB39, and CB40, for which exchange volumes were approximately 100%. The remaining
100
ships (CB26, CB28, CB29) did not exchange at sea as their voyages remained within the US
101
Exclusive Economic Zone, and were in compliance with US statutes in this regard.
102
From the upper-water column in one tank on each vessel, five independent, replicate, 1-L
103
water samples were collected into acid-washed and autoclaved 1L polyethylene Nalgene®
104
bottles, for a total of 85 1-L samples. Because each ship is represented by samples from one
105
ballast tank only, reference in this report to a “tank” uniquely ties it to a particular “vessel” or
106
“ship”, and vice-versa. Temperature and salinity were measured in situ with a portable meter
107
(YSI Inc., Yellow Springs, OH, USA). Samples were kept in the dark on ice for transport to the
108
laboratory, usually within 1 hour, then two 500-ml aliquots from each bottle were separately
109
filtered (to reduce filtration time) through polyethersulfone filters (0.2 µm pore size, Supor 200
110
Membrane Disc Filters, Cat. #60301, PALL, Cortland, NY, USA) and the filters were stored at -
111
20°C. In June 2013, water samples were collected from two nearby locations for comparison,
112
one set from Old Dominion University’s Sailing Pier (ODUSP) on the Elizabeth River, 8.9 km
113
upriver from the Norfolk harbor. The other local water was collected at Norfolk’s Yacht and
114
Country Club (YC) on the Lafayette River, at its junction with the Elizabeth River and
115
approximately 11 km upriver from the harbor (n=5 1-L samples per location). We did not take
116
samples from the port proper, because we did not know whether any part of the port represents
117
undiluted “local water”.
118
DNA extraction and sequencing: DNA was extracted with PowerSoil® DNA Isolation Kit
119
(Cat. #12888, Mo Bio, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to manufacturer’s instructions, except that 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 7 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
120
the kit’s PowerBead tubes were replaced with 15ml Falcon tubes. Whether ballast water or local
121
water, two filters representing a bottle’s 1-L volume were combined in a single tube. DNA was
122
separately extracted from three replicate samples, representing a total of 3 L of water. Filters
123
representing the other two replicates were archived at -80°C. Thus, 57 samples were extracted,
124
51 of ballast water and 6 of local water. Checks of DNA yield and purity, and subsequent
125
amplification and sequencing of the V4 and V5 variable region of the 16S rRNA gene with
126
MiSeq Illumina technology, are detailed in the Supplementary Information.
127
Sequence processing: Details are given in the Supplementary information. Briefly, we
128
processed raw Illumina sequence reads using mothur v.1.33.3.41 After trimming primer
129
sequences and barcodes, the two data sets (June and August/September) were combined,
130
dereplicated, and unique sequences were aligned against the SILVA reference database 10242
131
and further corrected for erroneous sequences by pre-clustering them.43, 44 High-quality
132
sequences were classified using the Ribosomal Database Project Naïve Bayesian Classifier45 and
133
unspecific PCR amplicons (mitochondria, chloroplasts, Archaea, Eukarya, unknown domain)
134
were removed. The remaining sequences were clustered into operational taxonomic units (OTUs)
135
at sequence divergences of 3%.46 Finally, singleton sequence OTUs were removed. To normalize
136
sequencing effort across samples without compromising their measures of genetic diversity, all
137
samples (except one) were randomly subsampled to the number of reads in the sample with the
138
second fewest reads (13,075 sequences, CB36.R2). A sample with the least reads (7,243
139
sequences, CB36.R4) was intentionally removed from the analysis. The sequence data were
140
deposited in the GenBank Short Read Archive under accession number SRP045433.
141
Bacterial abundance: Values were estimated by quantifying 16S rRNA gene copy numbers
142
using quantitative PCR (qPCR) to amplify primers 341F and 534R.47 Each replicate sample 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 8 of 41
143
(n=57, i.e., (17 tanks + 2 local sites) X 3 replicates per tank or site) was measured in duplicate
144
and no-template controls were included. Details are in the Supplementary Information.
145
Species–specific qPCR: To detect Bacteria of public-health concern, we quantified Escherichia
146
coli (E. coli), Vibrio parahaemolyticus (V. parahaemolyticus), and V. vulnificus using
147
fluorophore-based detection of uidA,48 vvhA,49 and tlh genes.50 For V. cholerae, quantification
148
was based on a SYBR Green I assay during amplification of a sequence of the intergenic spacer
149
region between the 16S rRNA and 23S rRNA.51 Details are in the Supplementary Information.
150
Statistical analyses: Rarefaction curves were calculated in mothur v.1.33.341 with replicate
151
CB36.R4 removed (see above). Alpha diversity estimators (Shannon’s H’; Simpson index of
152
diversity (1-D); and the richness estimator SChao1) were calculated in PAST 2.17c software.52
153
Sequence abundances were square-root transformed to diminish the effect of dominant OTUs
154
while accounting for less dominant ones, then cluster analysis was performed with the Bray-
155
Curtis index at 1,000 bootstrap values, to graphically illustrate the relationships among the
156
different samples based on the UPGMA algorithm in PAST. Distance matrices between samples
157
were calculated using the Bray–Curtis index in PAST and used for nonmetric multidimensional
158
scaling (NMDS) and Principal Components Analysis (PCA), in conjunction with physical
159
variables including salinity, temperature, and ballast-water age (defined as the number of days
160
since the most recent loading of water in the tank). All OTUs’ abundance data were used in the
161
NMDS, while the PCA was constructed based on phyla (and classes within Proteobacteria)
162
frequencies. These distance matrices were also used in analysis of molecular variance
163
(AMOVA), to examine differences in bacterial assemblages among vessels that performed BWE,
164
vessels that did not, and local samples, and between all possible pairwise combinations.
165
AMOVA was performed in mothur. To assess the explanatory power of BWE and ballast water 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 9 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
166
(BW) age on the community composition and membership, we used a permutational multivariate
167
analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) with the Bray-Curtis index and based on 1,000
168
permutations implemented by ADONIS test in the vegan package53 in R.
169
Separately for tanks exchanged at sea (n=14) and for all tanks (n=17), we regressed
170
dependent variables species (OTU) richness, observed (S) and expected (SChao1), on independent
171
variables salinity, temperature, and ballast-water age. A Kolmogorov-Smirnoff statistic was
172
performed to test normality of these data. As many were not normal, regressions were tested for
173
significance at α = 0.05 through randomization of data (10,000 iterations/regression) to generate
174
customized F distributions from which p values were calculated.
175 176
Results
177
Salinity, temperature, and age of ballast water: In the 14 tanks exchanged at sea, salinities
178
ranged from 33.7 (CB23) to 37.0 (CB18, CB42) (Table 1), consistent with open-ocean salinities.
179
Water in the 3 unexchanged tanks reflected a lower salinity, in keeping with coastal water from
180
Massachusetts (CB26, salinity 31.0) and Mobile Bay, Alabama (CB28, CB29, salinities 20.1 and
181
20.2, respectively). Overall, however, there was no difference in mean salinity between sampling
182
periods (June, 32.07; August/September, 35.66; t-test, unequal variance, two-sided, p>0.05).
183
Salinities of local water samples were 24.0 (ODUSP) and 19.8 (YC). Across all vessels, ballast
184
water had been onboard 2 days (CB21) to 28 days (CB29) and ballast-water temperatures on
185
collection ranged from 20.0°C (CB21) to 32.0°C (CB41). Mean water temperatures in June were
186
less than those in August/September (24.8º vs. 27.9º, t-test, equal variance, two-sided, p5% of
229
relative abundance only in CB25 (18%) (Figure S2B). Among Gammaproteobacteria, the group
230
having greatest relative abundance among vessels was the order Thiotrichales (4.5%), while
231
Vibrionales demonstrated low relative abundances (0.01% to 1%). Epsilonproteobacteria were
232
rarely retrieved, but in one case (CB18), Campylobacterales accounted for 8% of OTUs, mainly
11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 41
233
represented by Sulfuromonas sp. Within Bacteroidetes, Flavobacteriales dominated with relative
234
abundances as high as 38% (CB24).
235
Thirty seven OTUs, representing > 0.5% of the sequences for each higher taxonomic group
236
(phylum), accounted for 50% of the total sequences (Figure S3). The most abundant OTU
237
(OTU1, 10% of all sequences) remained unaffiliated at the confidence level of 80% we used.
238
After manual classification, we assigned OTU1 to the SAR11 clade based on phylogenetic
239
analysis (Figure S4). OTU1 formed a distinct monophyletic group within Alphaproteobacteria
240
that also included OTU13 and was closely related to Pelagibacter and SAR11. This coherent
241
phylogenetic cluster ranged from 1.2% (CB28, low-salinity water from Mobile Bay) to 19.9%
242
(CB36, exchanged at sea, tied for highest salinity). OTU1 also was found in local waters, 8.5%
243
in YC and 11.4% in ODUSP.
244
Although many OTUs were not identified to genus, those that were represented major phyla
245
and were affiliated with the genera Cycloclasticus (OTU 4; Gammaproteobacteria; range 0.1%
246
(CB25, CB26) to 19% (CB37)), Novosphingobium (OTU 12; Alphaproteobacteria; 0% (CB38-
247
42) to 17% (CB25)), Sulfuromonas (OTU 32; Epsilonproteobacteria; 0% (CB24, 32, 36, 39-42)
248
to 8% (CB18)), Tenacibaculum (OTU 5; Flavobacteriia; 0% (CB38-42) to 13.3% (CB25)),
249
Gilvibacter (OTU 19; Flavobacteriia; 0% (CB21-24, 26-32) to 10.4% (CB40)), and Formosa
250
(OTU 23; Flavobacteriia; 0% (CB36-42) to 3.6% (CB27)).
251
Bacterial abundance: Based on qPCR results, 16S rRNA gene numbers were greatest in local
252
water samples (mean 2.30 x 109 copies/L ± SD 1.91 x 109, n=2) and least in June samples from
253
tanks that had undergone BWE (5.72 X 106 ± 7.71 x 106, n=7). In exchanged tanks sampled in
254
August/September (5.07 x 108 ± 4.33 x 108, n=7) and in June tanks not exchanged at sea (2.15 x
255
108 ± 3.65 X 108, n=3), values were intermediate. 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
256
Fecal indicator and pathogenic Bacteria: In sequence data, the genus Enterococcus was
257
detected only at the noise level (one in CB37.R1). The genus Escherichia was represented by
258
rare sequences sporadically retrieved from a few ships. Evidence of the genus Vibrio consisted of
259
only three sequences and comprised about 0.3% of all reads collectively across all ships, with a
260
single OTU accounting for approximately 0.25% of the vibrios detected. Local waters accounted
261
for 40% of all vibrio sequences. In qPCR analyses, most samples were negative for Vibrio
262
cholerae, V. vulnificus, V. parahaemolyticus, and E. coli. Exceptions were vessels CB38, CB39,
263
CB40, and CB41, positive for V. parahaemolyticus with 27, 218, 50, and 121 tlh gene copies per
264
100 ml of filtered water, respectively. Local waters, sampled in June only, yielded positive
265
results for V. vulnificus, with 2.1 x 102 (YC) and 3.9 x 102 (ODUSP) vvhA gene copies per 100
266
ml of filtered water.
267
Multivariate analyses: Cluster analysis of the sequence data showed clear temporal
268
demarcation of samples (Figure 2). Bacterial assemblages in tanks sampled in August/September
269
had only a 27% Bray-Curtis similarity to those collected in June, as well as to local water
270
samples, also collected in June. Within both times, however, the triplicate, within-tank samples
271
(only duplicates for CB36) clustered together, except CB27.R1, which “misclassified” with
272
samples from CB24. There was stronger within-tank similarity in August/September, from
273
approximately 70% (CB36, CB37, CB38) to 78% (CB42). In June, within-tank similarity values
274
ranged from about 60% to 67%, with two exceptions, CB24 (53%) and CB32 (41%). The
275
Bacteria signal from the two local sites (54% similarity) first clustered (34%) with samples from
276
tanks holding unexchanged, low-salinity water from Mobile Bay (CB28, CB29) to form a group
277
distinct from all others. The only other samples from an unexchanged tank (CB26) contained
13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 14 of 41
278
coastal Massachusetts water and clustered first (49%) with samples from a tank exchanged south
279
of Nova Scotia (CB21).
280
Among ships that exchanged ballast water in the North Atlantic Ocean, there were instances
281
in which a geographic signal arguably emerged, one assignable to ships’ last ports of call. First,
282
in August/September samples, the strongest inter-vessel cluster (45%) occurred between CB39
283
(Rotterdam) and CB40 (Montoir). This cluster was subsequently joined by CB38 (Ijmuiden),
284
then CB41 (Rotterdam), to form a larger group (similarity 34%) of vessels having last ports of
285
call either in the Netherlands or France. Second, two ships having last ports of call in southern
286
Italy (CB37, CB42) formed their own cluster (38%). Third, two ships with last ports of call in
287
Germany (CB23, CB27--other than replicate R1) clustered first with one another (42%).
288
Results of NMDS analysis (stress: 0.17) were consistent with the cluster analysis; replicate
289
samples were tightly grouped and samples collected in June were topologically separated from
290
those taken in August/September (Figure 3). Both analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) and
291
Adonis test showed a significant difference among bacterial assemblages from the three groups
292
(unexchanged, exchanged, and local water) and their pairwise combinations (p99%.27, 61 With respect to pathogens in particular,
358
ballast water is thought by some8, 66 but not all67, 68 to have delivered an Asian strain of Vibrio
359
cholerae to South America and caused the 1991 cholera epidemic. Haendiges et al. (2016)69
360
speculated that ballast water introduced a non-autochthonous strain of V. parahaemolyticus to
361
upper Chesapeake Bay. Brinkmeyer14 reported 60 human, fish, and plant pathogens in ballast
362
water, suggesting their potential for translocation.
363
Pathogens and fecal-indicator Bacteria: With respect to discharge regulations specifying
364
maximum concentrations of fecal-indicator (E. coli, enterococci) and pathogenic (Vibrio
365
cholerae) Bacteria, this study’s results indicated few such organisms among 17 ships. Whether
366
through DNA sequence analysis or qPCR amplification of extracted DNA, these organisms were
367
found, if at all, in miniscule numbers. Of other potentially pathogenic Vibrio species tested for
368
with qPCR, only V. parahaemolyticus was detected in several ballast tanks. In contrast, there are
369
multiple reports of ballast water containing vibrios as determined by culture, fluorescent17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 18 of 41
370
antibody techniques, PCR, or sequencing methods.8, 12-15, 17 Perhaps ballast water in this study
371
truly was nearly devoid of these Bacteria. Another possibility, however, is that the concentration
372
of DNA specific for these forms was at such low levels that they went undetected with the broad
373
bacterial marker used, i.e., a portion of the 16S rRNA gene amplicon. That they were largely
374
undetected with qPCR may reflect the heterogeneity of gene markers in environmental strains.
375
Finally, if there was water-column heterogeneity in the distribution of these Bacteria, as has been
376
shown for zooplankton,70 then any aggregations may not have been sampled, as all within-tank
377
replicates were collected from a single water depth.
378
Comparisons with other studies: Across the three NGS studies of Bacteria in ballast water,
379
there was a 15-fold range of unique OTUs reported (Table 2), from 21,000 (present
380
study). Of tanks that underwent BWE, bacterial diversity estimated by Shannon’s H’ was highest
381
overall in the present study, but Simpson’s evenness index had approximately the range reported
382
by Ng et al. (2015).40 With reference to aquatic species-area theory,71 the greater number of
383
bacterial OTUs and higher diversity in the present study likely reflect its greater number of ships,
384
samples, and volumes of water extracted. In exchanged tanks, 16S rRNA gene counts of the
385
present study encompassed those of the other two and generally agree with the range of direct
386
counts of bacteria reported in ballast water,15, 16, 24 except at the low end, June samples
387
representing exchanged ballast (mean 5.72 x 106 gene copies/L).
388
When the composition of Bacteria was compared among investigations, the relative
389
dominance of Prochlorococcus- and Synechococcus-associated cyanobacterial OTUs (GPIIA
390
group) and the SAR11 cluster was greatest in this study, suggesting a stronger open-ocean signal
391
in the tanks following exchange. Indeed, the low salinities of samples reported by Ng et al.
392
(2015),40 values from 14 to 20.7, suggest BWE occurred in coastal water. While Ng et al. 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 19 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
393
(2015)40 found Gammaproteobacteria heavily dominated the bacterial assemblage in exchanged
394
tanks, Brinkmeyer (2016)14 and the present study instead determined the Roseobacter clade
395
within the Alphaproteobacteria predominated. All three studies reported Thiotrichales as
396
dominant within Gammaproteobacteria and Flavobacterales among Bacteroidetes.
397
We also compared our results with descriptions of bacterioplankton in oceanic surface
398
waters.57, 72, 73 This comparison is not straightforward, given no coincidence of geography or
399
sampling depth, that ballast tanks do not preserve open-ocean conditions and are not conducive
400
to survival of oceanic microbial communities,17, 22 and the sometimes incomplete nature of
401
BWE.27, 61 Nonetheless, the range of OTUs in ballast water (348 to 1,468) was within that
402
reported by others for upper-ocean waters: 245 to 2,063 OTUs;57 446 to 1,157 OTUs;72; and 796
403
to 1,258 OTUs.73 Comparisons of diversity are more limited; only Jing et al.73 reported
404
Shannon’s H’ (mean 4.25, SD 0.06, range 4.17 to 4.31, n=3). By comparison, the present study’s
405
ballast-water samples had essentially the same mean, but a greater range (mean 4.26, SD 0.52,
406
range 3.20 to 5.09, n=14), a result presumably related to multiple combinations of ballast source
407
water, tank conditions, and water age.
408
With respect to major taxa, Proteobacteria (mostly Alpha- and Gamma-) dominated ballast-
409
tank assemblages, as they do those of oceanic surface water, but usually in lesser proportions
410
within tanks (21% to 58%; CB42 highest at 72%) compared to those reported previously, about
411
88% in surface waters, n=6,57 and 61% to 68%, n=3.73 We attribute this differential in part to the
412
comparatively high proportion of unclassified Bacteria in our analysis, as well as finding high
413
proportions of Bacteroidetes and Planctomycetes in some tanks. Consistent with global ocean
414
surveys,74, 75 we found SAR11 and GPIIA group–associated cyanobacterial OTUs (e.g., genera
415
of Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus) as dominant taxa in exchanged tanks. 19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 20 of 41
416
Indeed, we assigned OTU1, the most abundant taxon in tanks, to the SAR11 clade of
417
Alphaproteobacteria, which comprises about one third of Bacteria in multiple locations of the
418
open ocean.76, 77 It is noteworthy that this dominance was exhibited even in the oldest ballast-
419
water sampled (CB32, 26 days, 10.6% relative dominance). The success of this taxon has been
420
attributed to efficient genome streamlining, allowing it to adapt to nutrient-poor environments.74
421
We do not know, however, whether presumably nutrient-poor conditions in ballast tanks sustain
422
predominance of SAR11.
423
Oceanic OTUs affiliated with Rhodobacteraceae and specifically Roseobacter clade-
424
affiliated (RCA) ones, e.g. Roseobacter and Sulfitobacter, also were ubiquitous and abundant in
425
tanks. RCAs are cosmopolitan in temperate seawaters.78 Sulfitobacter shows close association
426
with organic particles, especially diatoms,79 suggesting the group is intrinsic to fecal pellets.80
427
Members of the RCA cluster metabolize dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), the major source
428
of organic sulfur in the world’s oceans, and have been associated with DMSP-producing
429
dinoflagellates.81 Therefore, their prevalence suggests the presence of such algae, some of which
430
are harmful. Algal OTUs affiliated with Prorocentrum spp. and Alexandrium spp. have been
431
reported from ballast tanks.38
432
OTU2 (Saprospiraceae) was particularly pronounced in CB23, CB24, and CB27; in the latter
433
two, it was more abundant than OTU1. OTU2, along with other abundant OTUs (≥0.5%)
434
affiliated with Bacteroidetes, represents a phylum abundant in coastal waters and in the oceans. It
435
is assumed its members attach to particles and degrade polymers, because they exhibit a positive
436
correlation to phytoplankton blooms82 and organic-matter particles.83 OTU4 predominated in
437
tanks on CB37 and CB40 and is affiliated with Cycloclasticus spp., a bacterium mainly found in
438
marine sediments and linked to degradation of toxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH).84 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
439
Another presumed PAH degrader, OTU12 (Novosphingobium spp.-affiliated),85 dominated
440
exclusively in CB25. Presence of these PAH degraders suggest residual coastal water in the
441
tanks.14
442
Cyanobacteria were abundant in local waters, especially OTU3 and OTU1, but usually
443
comprised a smaller fraction of bacterial relative abundance in ballast water, albeit larger ones
444
than those reported by others.14, 40 In particular, CB21 and CB29 contained 10% and 12%
445
Cyanobacteria, respectively, values that might be underestimates. In a test of ballast-water
446
treatment using propidium mono-azide to differentiate between living and dead cells, Fujimoto et
447
al. (2014)34 suggested the number of cyanobacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences in intake waters
448
was masked by DNA in dead or dying cells, also known as “relic DNA”.86
449 450
Supporting Information
451
Additional “Materials and Methods” and Figures S1-S6 and Tables S1-S2. This information is
452
available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
453 454
Acknowledgements
455
This research was supported in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Emerging
456
Infectious Disease program [Grant EF-0914429]. We appreciate reference strains of bacteria
457
from Profs. Rita Colwell and Henry Neal Williams, the assistance of Mr. Patrick Tennis and
458
Prof. Alexander Bochdansky with regressions, and comments from anonymous reviewers. We
459
especially thank colleagues from the SERC who sampled ballast tanks and helped interpret
460
ships’ documents: Drs. Kimberly Holzer and K. Jenny Carney, and Ms. Danielle Verna. 21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 22 of 41
461
References
462
1.
463
differences in ships' ballast water management to reduce marine invasions in the contiguous
464
United States. BioScience 2011, 61, (11), 880-887.
465
2.
466
World's oceans. In Invasive Species and Biodiversity Management; Sandlund, O.T. et al., Eds.;
467
Kluwer Academic Publishers: Netherlands 2001; pp 195-212.
468
3.
469
MacIsaac, H.; Wonham, M. Assessing the Relationship Between Propagule Pressure and
470
Invasion Risk in Ballast Water. The National Academies Press: Washington, DC, 2011.
471
4.
472
Technol. 2005, 39, (12), 259A-264A.
473
5.
474
water in Singapore Harbour by flow cytometry with FISH. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2004, 49, (4), 334-
475
343.
476
6.
477
from the first ballast water sampling study in the Mediterranean Sea–the Port of Koper study.
478
Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2007, 54, (1), 53-65.
479
7.
480
Burgess, J. G.; Mesbahi, E. Characterization of bacteria in ballast water using MALDI-TOF
481
mass spectrometry. PloS one 2012, 7, (6), e38515.
Miller, A. W.; Minton, M. S.; Ruiz, G. M. Geographic limitations and regional
Carlton, J. T. The scale and ecological consequences of biological invasions in the
Carlton, J.; Ruiz, G.; Byers, J.; Cangelosi, A.; Dobbs, F.; Grosholz, E.; Leung, B.;
Dobbs, F. C.; Rogerson, A. Ridding ships' ballast water of microorganisms. Environ. Sci.
Joachimsthal, E.; Ivanov, V.; Tay, S.-L.; Tay, J.-H. Bacteriological examination of ballast
David, M.; Gollasch, S.; Cabrini, M.; Perkovič, M.; Bošnjak, D.; Virgilio, D. Results
Emami, K.; Askari, V.; Ullrich, M.; Mohinudeen, K.; Anil, A. C.; Khandeparker, L.;
22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 23 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
482
8.
McCarthy, S. A.; Khambaty, F. M. International dissemination of epidemic Vibrio
483
cholerae by cargo ship ballast and other nonpotable waters. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 1994, 60,
484
(7), 2597-601.
485
9.
486
D. S.; Herrera-Rodríguez, M.; Olvera-Novoa, M. A. Ballast water as a vector of coral pathogens
487
in the Gulf of Mexico: The case of the Cayo Arcas coral reef. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2008, 56, (9),
488
1570-1577.
489
10.
490
bacteria in some ships' ballast water incoming from various marine regions to the Sea of
491
Marmara, Turkey. Mar. Environ. Res. 2012, 81, 35-42.
492
11.
493
V. R.; Espey, D.; Handzel, T.; Henry, A. Preventing maritime transfer of toxigenic Vibrio
494
cholerae. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2012, 18, (10), 1680.
495
12.
496
vibrios: assessment in ballast water, harbor areas, and coastal ecosystems in Brazil. Front.
497
Microbiol. 2013, 3, (443), 10.3389.
498
13.
499
Vibrio cholerae isolated from ships’ ballast tanks and coastal waters: assessment of antibiotic
500
resistance and virulence genes (tcpA and ctxA). Microb. Ecol. 2013, 65, (4), 969-974.
501
14.
502
DNA sequencing. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2016, 107, (1), 277-285.
Aguirre-Macedo, M. L.; Vidal-Martinez, V. M.; Herrera-Silveira, J. A.; Valdés-Lozano,
Altug, G.; Gurun, S.; Cardak, M.; Ciftci, P. S.; Kalkan, S. The occurrence of pathogenic
Cohen, N. J.; Slaten, D. D.; Marano, N.; Tappero, J. W.; Wellman, M.; Albert, R. J.; Hill,
Rivera, I. N.; Souza, K.; Souza, C. P.; Lopes, R. M. Free-living and plankton-associated
Dobbs, F. C.; Goodrich, A. L.; Thomson III, F. K.; Hynes, W. Pandemic serotypes of
Brinkmeyer, R. Diversity of bacteria in ships ballast water as revealed by next generation
23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 24 of 41
503
15.
Ruiz, G. M.; Rawlings, T. K.; Dobbs, F. C.; Drake, L. A.; Mullady, T.; Huq, A.; Colwell,
504
R. R. Global spread of microorganisms by ships. Nature 2000, 408, (6808), 49-50.
505
16.
506
bacterioplankton and virioplankton communities. Biol. Invas. 2001, 3, (2), 193-199.
507
17.
508
W.; Parrow, M. W.; Sullivan, M. J.; Zimba, P. V.; Allen, E. H. Phytoplankton and bacterial
509
assemblages in ballast water of US military ships as a function of port of origin, voyage time,
510
and ocean exchange practices. Harm. Algae 2007, 6, (4), 486-518.
511
18.
512
through ballast water: a case study from the west coast of Canada. Aquat. Invas. 2010, 5, (1), 5-
513
11.
514
19.
515
oceanic voyages of bulk carriers: environmental controls. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 2011, 436, 145-
516
159.
517
20.
518
including both uncultured and culturable bacteria, with mid-ocean ballast-water exchange during
519
a voyage from Japan to Australia. PloS one 2014, 9, (5), e96274.
520
21.
521
ballast water, sediment, and biofilm. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2007, 55, (7), 333-341.
522
22.
523
Microbial ecology of ballast water during a transoceanic voyage and the effects of open-ocean
524
exchange. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 2002, 233, 13-20.
Drake, L. A.; Choi, K.-H.; Ruiz, G. M.; Dobbs, F. C. Global redistribution of
Burkholder, J. M.; Hallegraeff, G. M.; Melia, G.; Cohen, A.; Bowers, H. A.; Oldach, D.
Sun, B.; Mouland, R.; Way, C.; Rivkin, R. B. Redistribution of heterotrophic prokaryotes
Seiden, J. M.; Way, C. J.; Rivkin, R. B. Bacterial dynamics in ballast water during trans-
Tomaru, A.; Kawachi, M.; Demura, M.; Fukuyo, Y. Changes in microbial communities,
Drake, L. A.; Doblin, M. A.; Dobbs, F. C. Potential microbial bioinvasions via ships’
Drake, L. A.; Ruiz, G. M.; Galil, B. S.; Mullady, T. L.; Friedmann, D. O.; Dobbs, F. C.
24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 25 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
525
23.
Seiden, J. M.; Way, C.; Rivkin, R. B. Microbial hitchhikers: dynamics of bacterial
526
populations in ballast water during a trans-Pacific voyage of a bulk carrier. Aquat. Invas. 2010, 5,
527
(1), 13-22.
528
24.
529
during ocean transit. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2014, 78, (1), 7-14.
530
25.
531
concentration‐based numeric discharge limits. Ecol. Appl. 2013, 23, (2), 289-300.
532
26.
533
management. Environ. Rev. 2014, 22, (3), 298-310.
534
27.
535
in press. Management of Biological Invasions.
536
28.
537
biology of ballast water. Oceanog. Mar. Biol. 1985, 23, 313-371.
538
29.
539
vector for the transport of non-indigenous marine species. Estuar. Coast. Shelf Sci. 1988, 26, (4),
540
409-420.
541
30.
542
after ballast water exchange in regional seas. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2008, 56, (5), 834-844.
543
31.
544
ballast water: implications for plankton biogeography and aquaculture. J. Plank. Res. 1992, 14,
545
(8), 1067-1084.
Seiden, J. M.; Rivkin, R. B. Biological controls on bacterial populations in ballast water
Albert, R. J.; Lishman, J. M.; Saxena, J. R. Ballast water regulations and the move toward
Balaji, R.; Yaakob, O.; Koh, K. K. A review of developments in ballast water
Molina, V.; Drake, L. A. Efficacy of open-ocean ballast water exchange: a review. 2016.
Carlton, J. T. Transoceanic and interoceanic dispersal of coastal marine organisms: the
Williams, R.; Griffiths, F.; Van der Wal, E.; Kelly, J. Cargo vessel ballast water as a
McCollin, T.; Shanks, A. M.; Dunn, J. Changes in zooplankton abundance and diversity
Hallegraeff, G.; Bolch, C. Transport of diatom and dinoflagellate resting spores in ships'
25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 26 of 41
546
32.
Villac, M. C.; Kaczmarska, I.; Ehrman, J. M. The diversity of diatom assemblages in
547
ships' ballast sediments: colonization and propagule pressure on Canadian ports. J. Plank. Res.
548
2013, 35, (6), 1267-1282.
549
33.
550
ballast tanks by food web interactions. Europ. J. Protistol. 1997, 33, (3), 244-253.
551
34.
552
Ram, J. L. Application of ion torrent sequencing to the assessment of the effect of alkali ballast
553
water treatment on microbial community diversity. PloS one 2014, 9, (9), e107534.
554
35.
555
communities in ballast water. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2015, 49, (14), 8396-8407.
556
36.
557
biosphere. PloS one 2016, 11, (4), e0152671.
558
37.
559
of ballast water onboard vessels spanning the North Atlantic Ocean. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 2014, 87,
560
(1), 201-210.
561
38.
562
pyrosequencing reveals high diversity of protistan parasites in ships’ ballast water: implications
563
for biogeography and infectious diseases. Microb. Ecol. 2015, 1-13.
564
39.
565
A.; Garcia-Vazquez, E. Detecting nuisance species using NGST: Methodology shortcomings and
566
possible application in ballast water monitoring. Mar. Environ. Res. 2015, 112, 64-72.
Galil, B. S.; Hülsmann, N. Protist transport via ballast water—biological classification of
Fujimoto, M.; Moyerbrailean, G. A.; Noman, S.; Gizicki, J. P.; Ram, M. L.; Green, P. A.;
Kim, Y.; Aw, T. G.; Teal, T. K.; Rose, J. B. Metagenomic investigation of viral
Kim, Y.; Aw, T. G.; Rose, J. B. Transporting ocean viromes: Invasion of the aquatic
Steichen, J. L.; Schulze, A.; Brinkmeyer, R.; Quigg, A. All aboard! A biological survey
Lohan, K. P.; Fleischer, R.; Carney, K.; Holzer, K.; Ruiz, G. Amplicon-based
Zaiko, A.; Martinez, J. L.; Ardura, A.; Clusa, L.; Borrell, Y. J.; Samuiloviene, A.; Roca,
26 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 27 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
567
40.
Ng, C.; Le, T.-H.; Goh, S. G.; Liang, L.; Kim, Y.; Rose, J. B.; Yew-Hoong, K. G. A
568
Comparison of microbial water quality and diversity for ballast and tropical harbor waters. PloS
569
one 2015, 10, (11), e0143123.
570
41.
571
Lesniewski, R. A.; Oakley, B. B.; Parks, D. H.; Robinson, C. J. Introducing mothur: open-
572
source, platform-independent, community-supported software for describing and comparing
573
microbial communities. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2009, 75, (23), 7537-7541.
574
42.
575
Glöckner, F. O. The SILVA ribosomal RNA gene database project: improved data processing
576
and web-based tools. Nucleic Acids Res. 2013, 41, (D1), D590-D596.
577
43.
578
rare biosphere through improved OTU clustering. Environ. Microbiol. 2010, 12, (7), 1889-1898.
579
44.
580
sensitivity and speed of chimera detection. Bioinformatics 2011, 27, (16), 2194-2200.
581
45.
582
assignment of rRNA sequences into the new bacterial taxonomy. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
583
2007, 73, (16), 5261-5267.
584
46.
585
taxonomic unit-based approaches for 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. Appl. Environ.
586
Microbiol. 2011, 77, (10), 3219-3226.
Schloss, P. D.; Westcott, S. L.; Ryabin, T.; Hall, J. R.; Hartmann, M.; Hollister, E. B.;
Quast, C.; Pruesse, E.; Yilmaz, P.; Gerken, J.; Schweer, T.; Yarza, P.; Peplies, J.;
Huse, S. M.; Welch, D. M.; Morrison, H. G.; Sogin, M. L. Ironing out the wrinkles in the
Edgar, R. C.; Haas, B. J.; Clemente, J. C.; Quince, C.; Knight, R. UCHIME improves
Wang, Q.; Garrity, G. M.; Tiedje, J. M.; Cole, J. R. Naive Bayesian classifier for rapid
Schloss, P. D.; Westcott, S. L. Assessing and improving methods used in operational
27 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 28 of 41
587
47.
Wessén, E.; Nyberg, K.; Jansson, J. K.; Hallin, S. Responses of bacterial and archaeal
588
ammonia oxidizers to soil organic and fertilizer amendments under long-term management.
589
Appl. Soil Ecol. 2010, 45, (3), 193-200.
590
48.
591
PCR assays for Escherichia coli targeting ribosomal RNA and single copy genes. Lett. Appl.
592
Microbiol. 2011, 52, (3), 298-306.
593
49.
594
Vibrio vulnificus in an estuarine environment: a multi-year analysis using qPCR. Estuar. Coasts
595
2014, 37, (2), 421-435.
596
50.
597
Development of a multiplex real-time PCR assay with an internal amplification control for the
598
detection of total and pathogenic Vibrio parahaemolyticus bacteria in oysters. Appl. Environ.
599
Microbiol. 2007, 73, (18), 5840-5847.
600
51.
601
Vibrio cholerae and Vibrio mimicus. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 1999, 65, (5), 2202-2208.
602
52.
603
education and data analysis. Palaeon. Electron. 4. 2001.
604
53.
605
Suggests, M. The vegan package. Community ecology package 2007, 10.
606
54.
Chern, E.; Siefring, S.; Paar, J.; Doolittle, M.; Haugland, R. Comparison of quantitative
Wetz, J. J.; Blackwood, A. D.; Fries, J. S.; Williams, Z. F.; Noble, R. T. Quantification of
Nordstrom, J. L.; Vickery, M. C.; Blackstone, G. M.; Murray, S. L.; DePaola, A.
Chun, J.; Huq, A.; Colwell, R. R. Analysis of 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer regions of
Hammer, Ø.; Harper, D.; Ryan, P. PAST: Paleontological Statistics Software Package for
Oksanen, J.; Kindt, R.; Legendre, P.; O’Hara, B.; Stevens, M. H. H.; Oksanen, M. J.;
Prosser, J. I. Replicate or lie. Environ. Microbiol. 2010, 12, (7), 1806-1810.
28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 29 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
607
55.
Knight, R.; Jansson, J.; Field, D.; Fierer, N.; Desai, N.; Fuhrman, J. A.; Hugenholtz, P.;
608
van der Lelie, D.; Meyer, F.; Stevens, R. Unlocking the potential of metagenomics through
609
replicated experimental design. Nat. Biotechnol. 2012, 30, (6), 513-520.
610
56.
611
J. L.; Horner-Devine, M. C.; Kane, M.; Krumins, J. A.; Kuske, C. R. Microbial biogeography:
612
putting microorganisms on the map. Nat. Rev. Microbiol. 2006, 4, (2), 102-112.
613
57.
614
bacterial communities in the North Atlantic revealed by massively parallel sequencing. Molec.
615
Ecol. 2011, 20, (2), 258-274.
616
58.
617
habitat filtering is structuring marine bacterial communities across the globe. Microb. Ecol.
618
2012, 64, (1), 8-17.
619
59.
620
microbes emerge in a neutral agent-based model. Science 2014, 345, (6202), 1346-1349.
621
60.
622
A. W.; Drake, L. A. Quantifying the total wetted surface area of the world fleet: a first step in
623
determining the potential extent of ships’ biofouling. Biol. Invas. 2016, 18, (1), 265-277.
624
61.
625
water exchange (BWE) in reducing aquatic nonindigenous species (ANS) introductions to the
626
Great Lakes Basin and Chesapeake Bay, USA: synthesis and analysis of existing information.
627
US Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration: 2007.
Martiny, J. B. H.; Bohannan, B. J.; Brown, J. H.; Colwell, R. K.; Fuhrman, J. A.; Green,
Agogué, H.; Lamy, D.; Neal, P. R.; Sogin, M. L.; Herndl, G. J. Water mass‐specificity of
Pontarp, M.; Canbäck, B.; Tunlid, A.; Lundberg, P. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that
Hellweger, F. L.; van Sebille, E.; Fredrick, N. D. Biogeographic patterns in ocean
Moser, C. S.; Wier, T. P.; Grant, J. F.; First, M. R.; Tamburri, M. N.; Ruiz, G. M.; Miller,
Ruiz, G. M.; Reid, D. F. Current state of understanding about the effectiveness of ballast
29 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 30 of 41
628
62.
Drake, L. A.; Meyer, A. E.; Forsberg, R. L.; Baier, R. E.; Doblin, M. A.; Heinemann, S.;
629
Johnson, W. P.; Koch, M.; Rublee, P. A.; Dobbs, F. C. Potential invasion of microorganisms and
630
pathogens via ‘interior hull fouling’: biofilms inside ballast water tanks. Biol. Invas. 2005, 7, (6),
631
969-982.
632
63.
633
slurry residuals (swish) arriving at Vancouver, British Columbia. Prog. Oceanogr. 2013, 115,
634
211-218.
635
64.
636
water exchange but distribute dominant species. Manag. Biol. Invas. 2014, 241-244.
637
65.
638
perturbations in marine microbial communities. FEMS Microbiol. Rev. 2011, 35, (2), 275-298.
639
66.
640
1216-1219.
641
67.
642
Cadarso-Suarez, C.; Figueiras, A.; Trinanes, J. Emergence of asiatic Vibrio diseases in South
643
America in phase with El Niño. Epidemiology 2008, 19, (6), 829-837.
644
68.
645
pandemic and origin of 1991 epidemic, Latin America. Emerg. Infec. Dis. 2010, DOI:
646
10.3201/eid1607.10013116.
647
69.
648
Escalona, N. A nonautochthonous US strain of Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolated from
Sutherland, T.; Levings, C. Quantifying non-indigenous species in accumulated ballast
Baier, R. E.; Forsberg, R. L.; Meyer, A. E.; Lundquist, D. C. Ballast tank biofilms resist
Nogales, B.; Lanfranconi, M. P.; Piña-Villalonga, J. M.; Bosch, R. Anthropogenic
Epstein, P. R.; Ford, T. E.; Colwell, R. R. Marine ecosystems. Lancet 1993, 342, (8881),
Martinez-Urtaza, J.; Huapaya, B.; Gavilan, R. G.; Blanco-Abad, V.; Ansede-Bermejo, J.;
Lam, C.; Octavia, S.; Reeves, P.; Wang, L.; Lan, R. Evolution of seventh cholera
Haendiges, J.; Jones, J.; Myers, R. A.; Mitchell, C. S.; Butler, E.; Toro, M.; Gonzalez-
30 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 31 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
649
Chesapeake Bay oysters caused the outbreak in Maryland in 2010. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
650
2016, 82, (11), 3208-3216.
651
70.
652
ballast tanks. J. Plankt. Res. 2002, 24, (7), 729-734.
653
71.
654
size determine aquatic bacterial richness? Ecology 2005, 86, (7), 1715-1722.
655
72.
656
eastern Atlantic Ocean reveal both vertical and latitudinal biogeographic signatures.
657
Biogeosciences 2012, 9, (6), 2177-2193.
658
73.
659
subarctic oceans revealed by pyrosequencing. PloS one 2013, 8, (11), e79423.
660
74.
661
L.; Eads, J.; Richardson, T. H.; Noordewier, M. Genome streamlining in a cosmopolitan oceanic
662
bacterium. Science 2005, 309, (5738), 1242-1245.
663
75.
664
Huse, S.; McHardy, A. C.; Knight, R.; Joint, I. Defining seasonal marine microbial community
665
dynamics. ISME J. 2012, 6, (2), 298-308.
666
76.
667
High cellular abundance of the SAR11 bacterioplankton clade in seawater. Nature 2002, 420,
668
806-809.
Murphy, K. R.; Ritz, D.; Hewitt, C. L. Heterogeneous zooplankton distribution in a ship's
Reche, I.; Pulido-Villena, E.; Morales-Baquero, R.; Casamayor, E. O. Does ecosystem
Friedline, C.; Franklin, R.; McCallister, S.; Rivera, M. Bacterial assemblages of the
Jing, H.; Xia, X.; Suzuki, K.; Liu, H. Vertical profiles of bacteria in the tropical and
Giovannoni, S. J.; Tripp, H. J.; Givan, S.; Podar, M.; Vergin, K. L.; Baptista, D.; Bibbs,
Gilbert, J. A.; Steele, J. A.; Caporaso, J. G.; Steinbrück, L.; Reeder, J.; Temperton, B.;
Morris, R.; Connon, S.; Rappé, M.; Vergin, K.; Siebold, W.; Carlson, C.; Giovannoni, S.
31 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 32 of 41
669
77.
Carlson, C. A.; Morris, R.; Parsons, R.; Treusch, A. H.; Giovannoni, S. J.; Vergin, K.
670
Seasonal dynamics of SAR11 populations in the euphotic and mesopelagic zones of the
671
northwestern Sargasso Sea. ISME J. 2009, 3, (3), 283-295.
672
78.
673
and polar oceans. Nature 2004, 427, (6973), 445-448.
674
79.
675
harbour distinct bacterial communities. Environ. Microbiol. 2005, 7, (6), 860-873.
676
80.
677
composition during degradation of copepod fecal pellets. J. Plank. Res. 2012, 34, (8), 700-710.
678
81.
679
Roseobacter spp. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2004, 70, (6), 3383-3391.
680
82.
681
Kassabgy, M.; Huang, S.; Mann, A. J.; Waldmann, J. Substrate-controlled succession of marine
682
bacterioplankton populations induced by a phytoplankton bloom. Science 2012, 336, (6081),
683
608-611.
684
83.
685
transparent exopolymeric particles in mesocosms under different turbulence intensities and
686
nutrient conditions. Aquat. Microb. Ecol. 2009, 55, 301-312.
687
84.
688
pugetii gen. nov., sp. nov., an aromatic hydrocarbon-degrading bacterium from marine
689
sediments. Inter. J. System. Evol. Microbiol. 1995, 45, (1), 116-123.
Selje, N.; Simon, M.; Brinkhoff, T. A newly discovered Roseobacter cluster in temperate
Grossart, H. P.; Levold, F.; Allgaier, M.; Simon, M.; Brinkhoff, T. Marine diatom species
Jing, H.; Shek, L.; Yung, W.; Jin, X.; Liu, H. Dynamics of bacterial community
Miller, T. R.; Belas, R. Dimethylsulfoniopropionate metabolism by Pfiesteria-associated
Teeling, H.; Fuchs, B. M.; Becher, D.; Klockow, C.; Gardebrecht, A.; Bennke, C. M.;
Pedrotti, M.; Beauvais, S.; Kerros, M.-E.; Iversen, K.; Peters, F. Bacterial colonization of
Dyksterhouse, S. E.; Gray, J. P.; Herwig, R. P.; Lara, J. C.; Staley, J. T. Cycloclasticus
32 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 33 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
690
85.
Notomista, E.; Pennacchio, F.; Cafaro, V.; Smaldone, G.; Izzo, V.; Troncone, L.;
691
Varcamonti, M.; Di Donato, A. The marine isolate Novosphingobium sp. PP1Y shows specific
692
adaptation to use the aromatic fraction of fuels as the sole carbon and energy source. Microb.
693
Ecol. 2011, 61, (3), 582-594.
694
86.
695
DNA is abundant in soil and obscures estimates of soil microbial diversity. bioRxiv 2016,
696
043372.
Carini, P.; Marsden, P. J.; Leff, J. W.; Morgan, E. E.; Strickland, M. S.; Fierer, N. Relic
697
33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 34 of 41
Table 1. Designations and characteristics of local water samples and ballast water samples collected from vessels arriving to Hampton Roads, Virginia, USA, in June or August/September 2013. Management = percentage of the tank’s volume exchanged in the open ocean; all exchanges ≥300% were flow-through, all exchanges approximately. 100% were empty-refill; Age = (days between BWE exchange and sampling); Volume = volume of ballast tank; BWE = location of BWE initiation; N/A = not applicable. Vessels CB26, CB28, and CB29 did not exchange ballast at sea as their voyages did not extend beyond the US Exclusive Economic Zone. Samples
Vessel SERC ID
Jun 2013 1 CB18 2 CB21 3 CB23 4 CB24 5 CB25 6 CB26 7 CB27 8 CB28 9 CB29 10 CB32 Aug/Sep 2013 11 CB36 12 CB37 13 CB38 14 CB39 15 CB40 16 CB41 17 CB42 Local Samples 18 ODUSP 19 YC
Management (% Exchange)
Temperature (°C)
338 300 307 100 354 No exchange 342 No exchange No exchange 324
25.0 20.0 27.0 25.0 26.5 24.0 24.5 24.0 27.0 25.0
300 100 342 103 99 371 312 N/A N/A
Salinity
BWE Lat. (W) Long. (N)
Age (days)
Volume (m3)
37.0 35.1 33.7 35.7 35.9 31.0 35.4 20.1 20.2 36.6
14 2 6 10 4 7 13 16 28 26
3109 1463 3736 482 1206 1751 5317 1371 1593 5082
Moneypoint, Ireland Canso, Canada Hamburg, Germany Ghent, Belgium Port Alfred, Canada Somerset, MA Stade, Germany Mobile, AL Mobile, AL Brindisi, Italy
52.23 41.23 43.81 49.65 38.65
21.48 65.20 43.00 14.87 59.83
50.47
22.25
41.35
36.53
27.0 25.0 26.0 30.0 27.0 32.0 28.0
35.1 36.3 35.6 35.8 34.6 35.2 37.0
12 10 9 10 13 14 9
1514 1263 2119 5595 622 1011 2425
Brake, Germany Taranto, Italy Ijmuiden, Netherlands Rotterdam, Netherlands Montoir, France Rotterdam, Netherlands Brindisi, Italy
43.30 37.77 46.92 47.20 44.82 47.61 36.43
16.27 15.08 23.43 18.39 79.76 36.96 37.05
26.2 25.0
24.0 19.8
N/A N/A
N/A N/A
N/A N/A
N/A N/A
N/A N/A
Last Port of Call
34 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 35 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
Table 2. Comparison of three studies that have used next-generation DNA sequencing and subsequent metagenomic analysis to evaluate composition and diversity of Bacteria in ships’ ballast water. Ng et al. (2015)40
Brinkmeyer (2016)14
this study
3
5
17
volume extracted per sample (L)
2.4 a
approx. 5 b
3
sample replication
none
none
3 replicates/sample
age of water (days)
4 to 107
10 to 30
2 to 28
Roche 454
Ion Torrent
MiSeq Illumina
1,395
not given
21,371
Shannon H’ exchanged tanks
2.67 to 4.32; n=3
2.45 to 3.99; n=4
3.20 to 5.09; n=14
Simpson index exchanged tanks
0.71 to 0.95; n=3
not given
0.87 to 0.98; n=14
1.2 to 3.7 x 108; n=4
5.72 x 106 to 5.07 x 108; n=14
number of tanks sampled
NGS technology unique OTUs
16S rRNA gene counts/L 5 x 107 to 8 x 108 c; n=3 exchanged tanks a
DNA was extracted from 20 ml of concentrated water sample (equivalent to 2.4 L of original water sample)
b
pers. comm.
c
estimated from their Figure 1
35 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 36 of 41
Figure legends Figure 1. Relative abundances of partial (approximately 260 bp) sequences of bacterial 16S rRNA gene were estimated by classification at the phylum level, using MOTHUR with a modified 16S rRNA database from the Ribosomal Database Project. The diverse phylum of Proteobacteria is represented at the class level with different shades of green. A vertical line separates the ballast water samples (CB labels) from those of local Norfolk waters (ODUSP and YC). Key for symbols beneath sample labels: Black triangles=local Norfolk water samples; Squares=tanks sampled in June; Dots=tanks sampled in August/September; Black, gray, or red fill=tanks that underwent a 300% (or greater) volume exchange, a 100% volume exchange, or no exchange, respectively. Un. Proteo=unclassified Proteobacteria.
Figure 2. Cluster diagram for the 19 samples (3 replicates/sample, except for CB36, with only 2 replicates) constructed from a Bray-Curtis similarity matrix of square-root transformed OTU abundances. One thousand bootstrap analyses were conducted. Sample designations: Black triangles=local Norfolk water samples; Squares=tanks sampled in June; Dots=tanks sampled in August/September; Black, gray, or red font and fill=tanks that underwent a 300% (or greater) volume exchange, a 100% volume exchange, or no exchange, respectively. Country (and for USA samples, state) of last port of call indicated: B (Belgium); CDN (Canada); D (Germany); FRA (France); I (Italy); IRL (Ireland); NET (Netherlands); USA-MA (Massachusetts); USA-AL (Alabama). Local water samples indicated as USA-VA (Virginia).
36 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 37 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 3. Non-metric multidimensional (NMDS) scaling plots in two dimensions constructed from a Bray-Curtis matrix of square-root transformed OTU abundances, including environmental variables (ballast water age, salinity, and temperature). Sample designations: Black triangles=local Norfolk water samples; Squares=tanks sampled in June; Dots=tanks sampled August/September; Black, gray, or red fill=tanks that underwent a 300% volume exchange, a 100% volume exchange, or no exchange, respectively.
37 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 1. Relative abundances of partial (approximately 260 bp) sequences of bacterial 16S rRNA gene were estimated by classification at the phylum level, using MOTHUR with a modified 16S rRNA database from the Ribosomal Database Project. The diverse phylum of Proteobacteria is represented at the class level with different shades of green. A vertical line separates the ballast water samples (CB labels) from those of local Norfolk waters (ODUSP and YC). Key for symbols beneath sample labels: Black triangles=local Norfolk water samples; Squares=tanks sampled in June; Dots=tanks sampled in August/September; Black, gray, or red fill=tanks that underwent a 300% (or greater) volume exchange, a 100% volume exchange, or no exchange, respectively. Un. Proteo=unclassified Proteobacteria. 191x113mm (300 x 300 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 38 of 41
Page 39 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 2. Cluster diagram for the 19 samples (3 replicates/sample, except for CB36, with only 2 replicates) constructed from a Bray-Curtis similarity matrix of square-root transformed OTU abundances. One thousand bootstrap analyses were conducted. Sample designations: Black triangles=local Norfolk water samples; Squares=tanks sampled in June; Dots=tanks sampled in August/September; Black, gray, or red font and fill=tanks that underwent a 300% (or greater) volume exchange, a 100% volume exchange, or no exchange, respectively. Country (and for USA samples, state) of last port of call indicated: B (Belgium); CDN (Canada); D (Germany); FRA (France); I (Italy); IRL (Ireland); NET (Netherlands); USA-MA (Massachusetts); USA-AL (Alabama). Local water samples indicated as USA-VA (Virginia). 302x498mm (120 x 120 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 3. Non-metric multidimensional (NMDS) scaling plots in two dimensions constructed from a BrayCurtis matrix of square-root transformed OTU abundances, including environmental variables (ballast water age, salinity, and temperature). Sample designations: Black triangles=local Norfolk water samples; Squares=tanks sampled in June; Dots=tanks sampled August/September; Black, gray, or red fill=tanks that underwent a 300% volume exchange, a 100% volume exchange, or no exchange, respectively. 201x117mm (300 x 300 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 40 of 41
Page 41 of 41
Environmental Science & Technology
TOC graphic 338x190mm (96 x 96 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment